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Show THE SUGARHOUSE Hawaiian Fiih Display! Fifteen Dittinct Colors FRED OVA DANCE STUDIO , ANNOUNCE SUMMER COURSE IN DANCING the- - in.m TOE - TAP SluJin Saturday, June 2h, 1937 . A. M. to 12:.V). BALLET Phons: IlylanJ 2377 ACROBATICS Freda Vernon ! Honolulu A color-yin- 4 ichthyol-ogi- st would have ifcue success in classifying Hawaiian fish. The colors of the rainbow are just a starter. From there they go on to infinite gradations and blends. The late David Starr Jordan, of Stanford university, found it necessary to use more than 15 color designations in describing a single fish. They were old gold, light gold, light copper, lifht blue, indigo, blue, green, white, violet, tarnished silver, light steel blue, rose pearl, yellow, purple, black, orange pink and 1. Hull in Sugiiihouse ZG12 South 11th East 1. '..). O. UqjIsUr ;it BULLETIN, FRIDAY, JUNE 85, bluish-fuscou- s. OUR HUMAN RESOURCES 19S7 Hum ruge t) "The majority cf glaciers are melting mere rapidly than their rate of .advance, Nunatab glacier in the Yukon receded six miles i,i W-A-N25 years. Illecillewaet in Canada -T retreats more reluctantly a tenth 14 a in mile cf years. "Glaciers flourish virtually on the II you have anything to Sell, Trade, Exchange or Rent; Equator, wherever peaks are high of Africa, enough. The very or rent a place, buy a place, or need anything, let the public Mount Kilimanjaro (19,710 feet) in know this Department. Tanganyika, is girdled with no less than ten glaciers, although it is volcanic. Indeed, South American glaPHONE 'THE BULLETIN" ciers are frequently tucked into the pockets of quiet volcanic peaks in the Andes; and at Cerro Alto, in Ecuador, a glacier has taken possession of a second-han- d crater. "A roll call of glacial giants would bring up the names of Pamir glacier, in the Himalayas, possibly 100 miles long ; Hubbard glacier in AlasFOR ka, 90 miles long and in places 10 wide ; and the ice cap of Two front house keeping rooms, d miles (Spitzbergen). wholely or partly furnished to FURNITURE "The method of a glacier's Suit. 1055 South 11th East, Hy. more is the than growth spectacular land 5744-conIn All Its Branches trast. For the huge are Convenient Terms If Desired, merely overgrown colonies of which have become comHot pact granular ice. For this reason, glacial ice and icebergs are not YOURSELF REFRESH salty, as are the ice floes of frozen Upholstering Shop sea water." AT 1045 East 2Ut So. Hy. 8430 station CalliDg tip-to- p W-A-N- -T Hyland 364 DIRECTORY RENT Sval-bar- UPHOLSTERING rn ice-rive- rs After A Dry Day snow-flake- s, Why pay ob MlNkKAL to mhm Mm NEW PLATING KMntlAad-t- r 1110.00 approved mathod calM OVRHAUL ROY'S CENTENARIAN ON TOUR STOPS OIL and Gu Wot CHECH Katoa Skip and Oil Pnmplnx. DRIVE-I- SUGARHOUSE H PAINT TIME IS HERE TO STAY UNTIL FALL Let ue estimate your need Free, and 'We Make the World Brighter" Northwest ; Corner ESTORES) CononMion. ' UDINGB BACK "N-wl ' Bpaad and QuM. FILLS Bcona. : OVRHAUL nronditiona motor whila too driva not ntcinary to up your aar waitina fur repairs. OVKHAUL m food for w.OUU milat, and coau but 12.9 lor any nrnka of nr (iniukllatiaa 7Se). 10th East and 21st So. Ht French. Fried POTATOEfl They're Delicious Try THE PAINT POT UoHjr-Bu- k Guarantee. Write or mU lor FREE SAMPLE, ay LEITHEISER " 5 East 21st So. LETS GO FISHING OP PAUL H. HUNT To Associated Civle Clubs of Southern Utah Hy. 674 CAPT. Utah as if their bodies were fertilising the slopes of Cemetery Ridge at Gettysburg. In addition to the loss of two-thir- of our young people, we Stansbury In his report on a "Survey of have between 25,000 and 30,000 unSalt Lake" In 1847-- employed. This fundamental social 8 Buy Only GOOD COAL Call Hyland 2520 n CASTLE GATE O BLUE BLAZE 0 ABERDEEN D KING COAL Agents far Sentinel Stokers & Prepared Stoker Coal "LOBB'S on the JOB" SUGAR HOUSE COAL CO. llyland 2520 Was. 671 NOTICE! CALL FOR FARM HELP All children 14 years of age or older who desire to work in organized crews picking peas, beans, etc. for farmers will please register ap- plications by June 25th at one of the following places: GRANITE SCHOOL OFFICE!, 3234 South State Street. NEEDHAM'S DRUG STORE, corner 48th South and Holladay Blvd. TAYLORSVILLE MERCANTILE., Taylorsville. These crews will be organized and carefully supervised. They will be picked up by trucks at central points, taken to their work and returned daily. It Is desired that only children between 14 and 16 be registered for this work. mentions a horrible practice of the Indians in Utah of selling their children to the N'avajos to become later slaves of the Spaniards in ' Mexico. This practice is unprecedented in biological history. In the lowest forms of vegetable and animul life, parents sacrifice themselves that their young may survive. Plants give the last drop of Juice from roots, stalks add leaves to nourish tha seeds; fish batter themselves to pieces on the rocks in ascending rivers to spawn where the young may be free from their natural enemies in the sea; the females of certain scorpions In Mexico lay their eggs oi their backs and are consumed alive when the young scorpions hatch. Utah with an area of 82,000 under cultivasquare miles, 31 tion, has about (20,003 population, or slightly Over 6 to the square mile. Coming to maturity each year are about 5,200 young men and women. Surveys show that in order to earn o livelihood, these young people are leaving the state at the rate of 8,000 a year, 00 a month, or 10 each day. We are In fact exporting our own flesh and blood that the remainder of us may survive. We do this, not like Indians, for profit, but at huge losses to ourselves and the state. There has been exiiended by maturity on the average boy or girl 5000 J 1200 to $1500 for education, for food, clothing and housing and at least $1000 for church, recreational and medical purposes, a total of $7000 to $7500. Ws are exporting this investment in our young people at the rate of $70,000 a day, more than $2,000,000 a month and $25,000,000 a year. But money is the least of our losses. The blood losses we suffer cannot be replaced. We are sapping our future vigor. Initiative and vitality at an appalling rate. If continued we shall become a state of old men and women and spinsters. The Southern States lost 600,000 vigorous, courageous men out of a population of leas than 10,000,000 in five years of warfare. Such losses have stunted the natural growth or the South to this day. Here in Utah we are losing our best blood at the rate of 3 of let a year and do nut seem to realize the seriousness of the situation. These young people, earning their livings in California or Detroit, are as much a loss to the future welfare ot 2-- beside and economic problem, which all our other difficulty are Insignificant, will tend to disappear when we are growing at a rate that will offer opportunities to our young people to earn a living. While the industrialization of Utah has been going on for many yeurs, a great deal of our economic thinking is based upon the outlook of a pioneering agrarian state, although the opportunities for piog neering in agriculture and have long since ceased. We fear industrialization because we do not understand it. and, because of these prejudices, we are hostile toward it, although, as I sea it, It la our only salvatiix. Let mo point out some of the benefits we all receive from these great aggregation of capital we call corporations. In 1927 I bought a Ganer?.l Motors car for $4160 and In 19P.5 turned it in for a small allowance and bought a far better car for about $1100. Tha purchasing value of my automobile dollar in these 8 years had increased at most 400, or, I had received the equivalent of nearly a 60 dividend In purchasing power a year. I did not receive this dividend as a stockholder of General Motors. Had I been a stockholder I would have received about 6 a year, a but as a consumer I got 50 year; this because stockholders were permitted to receive their 591 dividend, if earned. The reason people would invest their savings in General Motors stocks and bonds and thus finance facilities by which a better automobile could be manufactured each year at a profit and still at a smaller selling price, was because so far our laws and the Judgment of a majority of our people b&ve protected from conI fiscation of private property. might clamor against General Motors stockholders receiving 5 a year because I am not a stockholder, but in so doing I would be upsetting our whole industrial system, throwing hundreds of thousands of men out of employment and endangering my own ina year. direct dividends of 50 Let me cite you another example closer home. (In the second half of his address, to be given in another Issue, Mr. Hunt points out the relationship of nonferrous metal mining to the population and unemployment problems In Utah). stock-raisin- rWM ius7. m i a Hy. 8739 1 ADDRESS GARAGE East Zlst South 1074 c HOST HAVE J4W. W Miss Elizabeth Mcllwain of Santa Monica, Calif., who will be one hundred years old on September 12, is not at all feazed by travel. She is shown just before she departed on a transcontinental train journey to her girlhood home at Saltburg, Pa., outside of Pittsburgh. There a niece, Mrs. R. McIKva:n. is making for a rranJ and glorious Feed Em Feather's! JB Best in Tackle is Found at PHIL and JOE'S SThiiDhRD 1 tire WELDING? t 1021 on a linen towel, cover the spot immediately with dry starch and the stain will soon disappear. r V ' f the PW South 11th Eart Ilyland 458 THE TAILOR Suits made to order and remodeled for Ladies and Gentlemen Cleaning Pressing 1060 East 21st South Minnesota Aid History If iodine is accidentally dropped In F. W. KIEPE Fossil Remains Found in If the cement floor of your cellar has a rough finish, paint with a special paint used for this purpose sold by paint dealers. "Jimt Bring GRANITE WELDING & WIRE WORKS ) prep-irai'o- rs Dr. A. E. Minneapolis, Minn. Jenks, University of Minnesota anthropologist, chapter by chapter is turning back the history of man, with the mounds of northern Minnesota his most fertile source of information. With a great mass of data, col-- , lected in operations in the northern part of the state, Jenks returned to the university to begin to integrate his findings. The professor, aiJed by students and WPA workers, spent the summer digging near Red Lake Falls, Bronson, Malmo and Brown's valley. At the latter place in 1930 he found found bones out of which he construct d the Brown's Valley man, whose age was estimated at 8,000 years, and in the same area a few years ago he found "Miss Minnesota," who, it is believed was a belle 20,000 years ago. The scene of the professor's operations is on the "shore" of what once was Lake Agassiz, a body of water that covered 18,000 square miles following the recession of the Wisconsin glacier. In the gravel deposits at the lake shore have been found implements which the "early settlers" used. in their homemaking. Hy. 859S We Sell Fishing Licenses mu ' East 21st South 1113 WASHING MACHINES REPAIRED - Tricycles Vacuum Washers Irons Cleaners We Repair Bicycles' IrTftsi Lawn Mowers Broadway and 2nd East Sharpened and Repaired IDEAL REPAIR SHOP IMC South Uth Eut Hy. 2111 INDIAN HOUSE TRAILERS e AUTO LOANS and INSURANCE SUGARHOUSE NEW and USED CARS TRANSFER 6vJ SEE MORGAN MOTOR FINANCE CO. 8 Furniture Moving Our Specialty Grant Morgan, Mgr. 702 So. Main St. COUHTEOUS - REASONABLE Was. 6107 First Flows of Tree Branches The first farm plows were made of crooked tree branches and worked by man power. COME BACK To TM' HOUSE Phone: Hy. 1220 I MBSSSfiei 'Sjtfijffi YWUlKE'JeESOIEWM)- - il aaaTalaaaa"SBaViaS 11 115 g 7) |